
Today Marker/Ruler Pastel Pink Semi-Transparent
Today Marker/Ruler Pastel Pink Semi-Transparent
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What is the Pastel Pink Today Marker/Ruler?
The Pastel Pink Semi-Transparent Today Marker/Ruler is a hole-punched planner ruler that helps you flip quickly to the current day, week, or active section. It works as both a page marker and a ruler inside ring planner setups.
The marker is made from ultra-thick PVC, has a semi-transparent pastel pink finish, and is double-side printed. Four sizes are available so the marker can match different planner formats and page widths.
Key Features
- Pastel pink semi-transparent today marker/ruler
- Hole punched for ring planner setups
- Available in four sizes
- Made from ultra-thick PVC
- Double-side printed
Choosing pens and inks for planner paper
Planner writing tools behave differently depending on paper, ink flow, dry time, writing pressure, and how much ghosting you are comfortable with. If you are pairing this item with Tomoe River / Sanzen paper, test it on a back page or swatch area before committing to an important spread.
Fast notes, weekly spreads, and left-handed writing usually need a pen or ink that dries cleanly for your writing style.
Thin planner paper can show ghosting even when it handles ink well. Bleed-through, feathering, and smearing are better warning signs to watch for.
Use fine tips for small grid spaces, softer ink for journaling, and highlighters or markers carefully around wet fountain pen ink.
Planner pen FAQ
Test dry time, smearing, feathering, bleed-through, and how much ghosting you see on the back of the page. A quick swatch helps avoid surprises in a weekly spread or journal entry.
Many fountain pen users like Tomoe River / Sanzen paper, but results depend on nib size, ink, and writing pressure. Finer nibs and moderate ink flow are usually easier for everyday planning.
Fine gel pens, fine fountain pen nibs, and precise markers are easier to use in small date boxes, trackers, and compact weekly layouts.
Let the ink dry fully first and test the combination. Some highlighters can smear fountain pen ink, especially on smooth paper or with wetter inks.
